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Power From On High |
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CHAPTER 10 |
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How To Overcome Sin |
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BY Charles G. Finney |
In
every period of my ministerial life I have found many professed Christians in a
miserable state of bondage, either to the world, the flesh, or the Devil. But
surely this is no Christian state, for the apostle has distinctly said:
"Sin shall not have dominion over you, because ye are not under the law,
but under grace." In all my Christian life I have been pained to find so
many Christians living in the legal bondage described in the seventh Chapter of
Romans--a life of sinning, and resolving to reform and falling again. And what
is particularly saddening, and even agonizing, is that many ministers and
leading Christians give perfectly false instruction upon the subject of how to
overcome sin. The directions that are generally given on this subject, I am
sorry to say, amount to about this: "Take your sins in detail, resolve to
abstain from them, and fight against them, if need be with prayer and fasting,
until you have overcome them. Set your will firmly against a relapse into sin,
pray and struggle, and resolve that you will not fall, and persist in this until
you form the habit of obedience and break up all your sinful habits." To be
sure it is generally added: "In this conflict you must not depend upon your
own strength, but pray for the help of God." In a word, much of the
teaching, both of the pulpit and the press, really amounts to this:
Sanctification is by works, and not by faith. I notice that Dr. Chalmers, in his
lectures on Romans, expressly maintains that justification is by faith, but
sanctification is by works. Some twenty-five years ago, I think, a prominent
professor of theology in New England maintained in substance the same doctrine.
In my early Christian life I was very nearly misled by one of President
Edwards's resolutions, which was, in substance, that when he had fallen into any
sin he would trace it back to its source, and then fight and pray against it
with all his might until he subdued it. This, it will be perceived, is directing
the attention to the overt act of sin, its source or occasions. Resolving and
fighting against it fastens the attention on the sin and its source, and diverts
it entirely from Christ.
Now
it is important to say right here that all such efforts are worse than useless,
and not infrequently result in delusion. First, it is losing sight of what
really constitutes sin; and, secondly, of the only practicable way to avoid it.
In this way the outward act or habit may be overcome and avoided, while that
which really constitutes the sin is left untouched. Sin is not external, but
internal. It is not a muscular act, it is not the volition that causes muscular
action, it is not an involuntary feeling or desire; it must be a voluntary act
or state of mind.
Sin
is nothing else than that voluntary, ultimate preference or state of committal
to self pleasing out of which the volitions, the outward actions, purposes,
intentions, and all the things that are commonly called sin proceed. Now, what
is resolved against in this religion of resolutions and efforts to suppress
sinful and form holy habits? "Love is the fulfilling of the law." But
do we produce love by resolution? Do we eradicate selfishness by resolution? No,
indeed. We may suppress this or that expression or manifestation of selfishness
by resolving not to do this or that, and praying and struggling against it. We
may resolve upon an outward obedience, and work ourselves up to the letter of an
obedience to God's commandments. But to eradicate selfishness from the breast by
resolution is an absurdity. So the effort to obey the commandments of God in
spirit--in other words, to attempt to love as the law of God requires by force
of resolution is an absurdity. There are many who maintain that sin consists in
the desires. Be it so. Do we control our desires by force of resolution? We may
abstain from the gratification of a particular desire by the force of
resolution. We may go further, and abstain from the gratification of desire
generally in the outward life. But this is not to secure the love of God, which
constitutes obedience. Should we become anchorites, immure ourselves in a cell,
and crucify all our desires and appetites, so far as their indulgence is
concerned, we have only avoided certain forms of sin; but the root that really
constitutes sin is not touched. Our resolution has not secured love, which is
the only real obedience to God. All our battling with sin in the outward life,
by the force of resolution, only ends in making us whited sepulchers. All our
battling with desire by the force of resolution is of no avail; for in all this,
however successful the effort to suppress sin may be, in the outward life or in
the inward desire, it will only end in delusion, for by force of resolution we
cannot love.
All
such efforts to overcome sin are utterly futile, and as unscriptural as they are
futile. The Bible expressly teaches us that sin is overcome by faith in Christ.
"He is made unto us wisdom, righteousness, sanctification, and
redemption." "He is the way, the truth, and the life." Christians
are said to "purify their hearts by faith" (Acts 15:9). And in Acts
26:18 it is affirmed that the saints are sanctified by faith in Christ. In
Romans 9:31, 32 it is affirmed that the Jews attained not to righteousness
"because they sought it not by faith, but as it were by the works of the
law." The doctrine of the Bible is that Christ saves His people from sin
through faith; that Christ's Spirit is received by faith to dwell in the heart.
It is faith that works by love. Love is wrought and sustained by faith. By faith
Christians "overcome the world, the flesh, and the Devil." It is by
faith that they "quench the fiery darts of the wicked." It is by faith
that they "put on the Lord Jesus Christ and put off the old man, with his
deeds." It is by faith that we fight "the good fight," and not by
resolution. It is by faith that we "stand," by resolution we fall.
This is the victory that overcometh the world, even our faith. It is by faith
that the flesh is kept under and carnal desires subdued.
The
fact is that it is simply by faith that we receive the Spirit of Christ to work
in us to will and to do, according to His good pleasure. He sheds abroad His own
love in our hearts, and thereby enkindles ours. Every victory over sin is by
faith in Christ; and whenever the mind is diverted from Christ, by resolving and
fighting against sin, whether we are aware of it or not, we are acting in our
own strength, rejecting the help of Christ, and are under a specious delusion.
Nothing but the life and energy of the Spirit of Christ within us can save us
from sin, and trust is the uniform and universal condition of the working of
this saving energy within us. How long shall this fact be at least practically
overlooked by the teachers of religion? How deeply rooted in the heart of man is
self-righteousness and self-dependence? So deeply that one of the hardest
lessons for the human heart to learn is to renounce self-dependence and trust
wholly in Christ. When we open the door by implicit trust He enters in and takes
up His abode with us and in us. By shedding abroad His love He quickens our
whole souls into sympathy with Himself, and in this way, and in this way alone,
He purifies our hearts through faith. He sustains our will in the attitude of
devotion. He quickens and regulates our affections, desires, appetites and
passions, and becomes our sanctification.
Very
much of the teaching that we hear in prayer and conference meetings, from the
pulpit and the press, is so misleading as to render the hearing or reading of
such instruction almost too painful to be endured. Such instruction is
calculated to beget delusion, discouragement, and a practical rejection of
Christ as He is presented in the Gospel.
Alas!
for the blindness that "leads to bewilder" the soul that is longing
after deliverance from the power of sin. I have sometimes listened to legal
teaching upon this subject until I felt as if I should scream. It is astonishing
sometimes to hear Christian men object to the teaching which I have here
inculcated that it leaves us in a passive state, to be saved without our own
activity. What darkness is involved in this objection! The Bible teaches that by
trusting in Christ we receive an inward influence that stimulates and directs
our activity; that by faith we receive His purifying influence into the very
center of our being; that through and by His truth revealed directly to the soul
He quickens our whole inward being into the attitude of a loving obedience; and
this is the way, and the only practicable way, to overcome sin. But someone may
say: "Does not the Apostle exhort as follows: Work out your own salvation
with fear and trembling; for it is God which worketh in you, both to will and to
do of His good pleasure'? And is not this an exhortation to do what in this
article you condemn?" By no means. In the 12th verse of the second Chapter
of Philippians Paul says: "Wherefore, my beloved, as ye have always obeyed,
not as in my presence only, but now much more in my absence, work out your own
salvation with fear and trembling, for it is God that worketh in you, both to
will and to do of His good pleasure."
There
is no exhortation to work by force of resolution, but through and by the
inworking of God. Paul had taught them, while he was present with them; but now,
in his absence, he exhorts them to work out their own salvation, not by
resolution but by the inward operation of God. This is precisely the doctrine of
this tract. Paul had too often taught the Church that Christ in the heart is our
sanctification, and that this influence is to be received by faith, to be guilty
in this passage of teaching that our sanctification is to be wrought out by
resolution and efforts to suppress sinful and form holy habits. This passage of
Scripture happily recognizes both the divine and human agency in the work of
sanctification. God works in us to will and to do; and we, accepting by faith
His inworking, will and do according to His good pleasure. Faith itself is an
active and not a passive state. A passive holiness is impossible and absurd. Let
no one say that when we exhort people to trust wholly in Christ we teach that
anyone should be or can be passive in receiving and cooperating with the divine
influence within. This influence is moral, and not physical. It is persuasion,
and not force. It influences the free will, and consequently does this by truth,
and not by force. Oh! that it could be understood that the whole of spiritual
life that is in any man is received direct from the Spirit of Christ by faith,
as the branch receives its life from the vine. Away with this religion of
resolutions! It is a snare of death. Away with this effort to make the life holy
while the heart has not in it the love of God. Oh! that men would learn to look
directly at Christ through the Gospel and so close in with Him by an act of
loving trust as to involve a universal sympathy with His state of mind. This,
and this alone, is sanctification.